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One of the key negotiators who helped end the last government shutdown won’t support a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill, further adding to the likelihood of another closure. 

Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, told CBS’ Face the Nation on Sunday that he could not support the current, six-bill funding package as is because it included the DHS funding bill. King was a pivotal figure in ending the last shutdown, and was one of only eight Senate Democratic caucus members to join Republicans to end it. 

King, like other members of the Senate Democratic caucus, is infuriated by the death of Alex Pretti, the 37-year-old nurse who was shot dead by a border patrol agent in Minneapolis on Saturday. 

Congressional Democrats have railed against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents entering Minnesota and elsewhere, but begrudgingly agreed to support the DHS bill until the chaos over the weekend unfolded.

‘I hate shutdowns,’ King said. ‘I’m one of the people that helped negotiate the solution to the last — the end of the last shutdown, but I can’t vote for a bill that includes ICE funding under the circumstances.’ 

King’s resistance to the package comes after Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., announced that Senate Democrats would not support the legislation, increasing the odds of a partial government shutdown by the end of the week. 

It also comes on the heels of ICE entering King’s home state of Maine for operation Catch of the Day, where Democratic Gov. Janet Mills is running to beat Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, in a pivotal Senate race that could determine the balance of power in the upper chamber.  

King argued that there was an ‘easy way out’ of the funding snafu — Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., could separate out the DHS funding bill and let lawmakers vote on the remaining five bills.

However, should that happen, the House would still have to weigh in. The lower chamber won’t return to Washington, D.C., until next month, all but ensuring a partial government shutdown by Friday unless lawmakers can reach a compromise agreement. 

‘Let’s have an honest negotiation,’ King said. ‘Put some guardrails on what’s going on, some accountability, and that would solve this problem. We don’t have to have a shutdown.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump said Sunday that it was ‘too late’ to halt construction of a new ballroom at the White House, despite a newly filed lawsuit challenging the project.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump described the ballroom as ‘a GIFT (ZERO taxpayer funding) to the United States of America,’ estimating its cost at $300 million and saying it was financed through private donations.

Trump said the lawsuit was brought by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, criticizing the group for filing it after construction was already underway.

‘Why didn’t these obstructionists and troublemakers bring their baseless lawsuit much earlier?’ he wrote.

Trump added that the East Wing was ‘changed, built and rebuilt over the years’ and that ‘it bore no resemblance or relationship to the original building.’

On July 31, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced the planned construction of a 90,000-square-foot ballroom. The sprawling ballroom will accommodate approximately 650 seated guests and will stay true to the classical design of the White House.

The White House does not have a formal ballroom, and the new ballroom will take the place of the current East Wing of the White House. 

Since his return to office, Trump has wasted no time in reshaping the look and feel of the White House and the National Mall.

Trump has previously unveiled a new monument dubbed the ‘Arc de Trump,’ which is planned to commemorate the nation’s 250th anniversary next year.

He said the large arch, a near twin of Paris’s iconic Arc de Triomphe, will welcome visitors crossing the Arlington Memorial Bridge from Arlington National Cemetery into the heart of the nation’s capital.

Trump’s taste for opulence is unmistakable in the Oval Office, where golden accents now decorate the nation’s most iconic workspace, a reflection of his personal style.

Since then, Trump has added gold accents throughout the Oval Office to include decorative details along the ceiling and around the doorway trim. Even the cherubs inside the door frames were given a gilded makeover.

Outside the Oval Office, the Trump administration unveiled the ‘Presidential Walk of Fame,’ a series of portraits of past presidents now displayed along the West Wing colonnade.

The portrait of former President Joe Biden features his signature, created with an autopen, a machine that holds a pen and reproduces a person’s handwriting through programmed movements. The Trump administration has also installed several large mirrors in gold frames along the walkway.

Trump also said he renovated the Lincoln bathroom in the White House because it did not reflect the style of President Abraham Lincoln’s era. 

‘I renovated the Lincoln Bathroom in the White House. It was renovated in the 1940s in an art-deco green tile style, which was totally inappropriate for the Lincoln Era,’ Trump wrote in an Oct. 31 Truth Social post.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Si Woo Kim entered the final round of The American Express on Sunday, Jan. 25, with a one-shot lead but right on his trail are 18-year-old Blades Brown and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, both tied for second at 21-under-par.

If Brown is able to overtake Kim and Scheffler, he would become the youngest PGA Tour winner in history – and take home a $1.656 million payout in the process. Scheffler is the current betting favorite and a victory for him would put him alongside Tiger Woods and Jack Nichlaus as the only golfers to win four majors and 20 PGA Tour events before turning 30.

But don’t count out Wyndham Clark, either. The 2023 U.S. Open winner sits just two shots behind Kim.

Here’s what every golfer in the tournament will earn based on their finish:

Prize Pool breakdown for 2026 American Express

  • 1st: $1.656 million
  • 2nd: $1.0028 million
  • 3rd: $634,800
  • 4th: $450,800
  • 5th: $377,200
  • 6th: $333,500
  • 7th: $310,500
  • 8th: $287,500
  • 9th: $269,100
  • 10th: $250,700
  • 11th: $232,300
  • 12th: $213,900
  • 13th: $195,500
  • 14th: $177,100
  • 15th: $167,900
  • 16th: $158,700
  • 17th: $149,500
  • 18th: $140,300
  • 19th: $131,100
  • 20th: $121,900
  • 21st: $112,700
  • 22nd: $103,500
  • 23rd: $96,140
  • 24th: $88,780
  • 25th: $81,420
  • 26th: $74,060
  • 27th: $71,300
  • 28th: $68,540
  • 29th: $65,780
  • 30th: $63,020
  • 31st: $60,260
  • 32nd: $57,500
  • 33rd: $54,740
  • 34th: $52,440
  • 35th: $50,140
  • 36th: $47,840
  • 37th: $45,540
  • 38th: $43,700
  • 39th: $41,860
  • 40th: $40,020
  • 41st: $38,180
  • 42nd: $36,340
  • 43rd: $34,500
  • 44th: $32,660
  • 45th: $30,820
  • 46th: $28,980
  • 47th: $27,140
  • 48th: $25,660
  • 49th: $24,380
  • 50th: $23,644
  • 51st: $23,092
  • 52nd: $22,540
  • 53rd: $22,172
  • 54th: $21,804
  • 55th: $21,620
  • 56th: $21,436
  • 57th: $21,252
  • 58th: $21,068
  • 59th: $20,884
  • 60th: $20,700
  • 61st: $20,516
  • 62nd: $20,332
  • 63rd: $20,148
  • 64th: $19,964
  • 65th: $19,780
  • 66th: $19,596
  • 67th: $19,412
  • 68th: $19,228
  • 69th: $19,044
  • 70th: $18,860
  • 71st: $18,676
  • 72nd: $18,492
  • 73rd: $18,308
  • 74th: $18,124
  • 75th: $17,940
  • 76th: $17,756
  • 77th: $17,572
  • 78th: $17,388
  • 79th: $17,204
  • 80th: $17,020

What is the next tournament in the PGA Tour event?

The next stop on the PGA Tour is Torrey Pines La Jolla, California for Farmers Insurance Open. The event will take place from Jan. 29-Feb. 1and air on ESPN+/Golf Channel.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Mikaela Shiffrin is going to the Milano Cortina Olympics on a hot streak.

Shiffrin won her seventh World Cup slalom of the season on Sunday, Jan. 25, securing the season title in slalom even with two more races after the Olympics. It’s her ninth slalom title, breaking the previous record for globes in a single discipline set by Ingemar Stenmark (slalom and giant slalom) and Lindsey Vonn (downhill).

‘That’s crazy,’ Shiffrin said.

Shiffrin has won all but one slalom race this season, often by wide margins. This time she was 1.67 seconds ahead of Camille Rast of Switzerland.

Shiffrin let out a whoop after crossing the finish line, giving a small shake of her polls and blowing a kiss to fans.

‘It’s a very special place for me,’ Shiffrin said. ‘I’m happy to walk away from this weekend with another wonderful feeling.’

Shiffrin was third in the giant slalom on Saturday, Jan. 24, her first GS podium in two years.

Shiffrin is in perhaps the best form of her life in slalom – which is saying something considering 71 of her 108 career victories are in slalom. She has won eight of the last nine slalom races going back to last season.

The one outlier? She was second.

That makes Shiffrin a heavy favorite to win her second Olympic gold in slalom in Cortina, having won at the Sochi Games in 2014. She also is the Olympic champion in giant slalom from the 2018 Games in Pyeongchang.

‘The Olympics is a totally different challenge. I’ve had great Olympics, I’ve had tough Olympics,’ said Shiffrin, alluding to Beijing, where she posted DNFs in three races.

‘I try to go in with an open mind, good spirit, trust in my team. They’ve been amazing all season,’ she added. ‘We’re coming in with some strong athletes so think it’s time to enjoy that.’

Still, Shiffrin has to take confidence from how she’s skiing now. She’d won twice previously in Spindleruv Mlyn, Czech Republic, in 2019 and 2023, and dominated this race.

She drew bib No. 1 for the first run, and put down a run that no one could come close to touching. She finished the first run with a lead of 1.66 seconds on Wendy Holdener of Switzerland.

‘(Going first) was a little bit advantage,’ Shiffrin said. ‘We didn’t know how the surface was going to feel so I kind of didn’t have expectations. I just skied as hard as I could. By the time I could make a judgment on the hill, I was on the finish. I think everybody else could see there was some trickiness to handle.’

Despite the cushion, she came out of the gate pushing on the second run. She maintained her tight line as she flowed from one gate right into the next, never giving up any ground to her competitors as she won the second run as well.

‘Big push. Big mentality. I’m really happy with the day and the way we managed it,’ Shiffrin said. ‘Also from yesterday, it’s a good weekend.’

Now she’ll have a couple of weeks to train before her first race at the Olympics. Shiffrin is expected to do the slalom, giant slalom and team combined, and will be a medal favorite in all three.

The team combined is Feb. 10, the giant slalom is Feb. 15 and the slalom is Feb. 18.

‘Every race is different,’ Shiffrin said. ‘I’ve been skiing very strong and consistent the whole season, which is a great thing. But the other side of that is there’s a lot of expectations around the Olympics. My job is to focus on my skiing and put the expectations aside. That can be really hard at the Olympic Games.

‘It’s a new race and it requires full-gas mentality.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Pittsburgh Steelers have a new leader.

One of the most successful franchises in NFL history chose its fourth head coach of the Super Bowl era: Mike McCarthy.

Unlike the previous three hires, McCarthy brings expertise on the offensive side of the ball. Pittsburgh’s trio of coaches since 1970 – Mike Tomlin, Bill Cowher and Chuck Noll – all had backgrounds on the defensive side of the ball.

McCarthy’s also the only one to have been an NFL head coach prior to coming to Pittsburgh. He spent 13 years with the Green Bay Packers and won a Super Bowl in 2010 (coincidentally against his new employer, Pittsburgh). He also spent five seasons (2020-2024) with the Cowboys in Dallas.

This move closes up one of the more attractive jobs in the hiring cycle. Pittsburgh hasn’t finished below 0.500 in a season since 2003, with All-Pro talent on defense.

McCarthy is tasked with bringing the team its first playoff success in nearly a decade. Here are the winners and losers from this hiring:

WINNERS

Mike McCarthy

As he did last time a coaching tenure came to an end, McCarthy is back at the top after a year off. He’s now coached three of the most iconic teams in the sport’s history in the Packers, Cowboys, and now the Steelers.

McCarthy inherits a team with talent. His tenure in Dallas was marked by productive offenses but defenses that couldn’t lift the team’s ceiling enough and postseason letdowns. This team has talent at multiple spots on defense but needs more direction on offense with a young offensive line. He could go to work on offense and find a trusted defensive coordinator to keep the ship going in the right direction on that side of the ball.

Mike Tomlin

Tomlin spent nearly two full decades at the helm in Pittsburgh and never finished with a losing record. His tenure was defined by stability, even amid outsized player personalities.

If the Steelers went with a first-time head coach who turned things around dramatically in his first season, that may have soured how media members, fans and players alike viewed his final few years. Now, a potential improvement can be chalked up to a new but experienced head coach with a different area of expertise.

Aaron Rodgers

The oldest quarterback in the NFL hasn’t yet announced whether or not he’ll be back in 2026. This move by the Steelers at least gives him a known quantity at head coach, with whom he’s worked before.

The final years of the Rodgers-McCarthy tandem in Green Bay fell short of expectations. But after a few off years in New York, maybe a return to someone familiar isn’t the worst idea. At least McCarthy will know what to expect as the team navigates Rodgers’ potential retirement and succession plan.

LOSERS

Chris Shula

Think of how iconic the Shula name with the Steelers could be. The Los Angeles Rams’ defensive coordinator is one of multiple candidates from that side of the ball in this hiring cycle and looked poised for his first head coaching gig.

It would also blend the Steelers’ tradition of tapping a former defensive coach (coordinator or positional coach) who is younger than the league average. Shula’s time is certainly coming, but this seemed like an ideal marriage.

Sean McDermott

If the Steelers wanted to go with a proven head coach, McDermott may have been a solid option. He has more postseason success than McCarthy and has played high-leverage games in the AFC playoffs.

McDermott may understandably take a year off after his late exit from Buffalo but there’s a chance Pittsburgh may have been better served waiting to interview him. It’s been a long time, but Buffalo once had the longest postseason drought in the NFL before McDermott arrived and turned things around.

Dallas Cowboys

This is on the condition that McCarthy has postseason success in Pittsburgh. If McCarthy wins in the playoffs in the AFC with this Steelers roster, it’s going to reflect badly on the Cowboys. Dallas had more talent than Pittsburgh does at this time, so it may call into question the playoff fortitude of some of the Cowboys’ stars.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As a winter storm delivers brutally low temperatures and the threat of snow and ice across the United States, some collegiate sports teams are taking precautions to make sure players and fans are safe.

Several games on Saturday, Jan. 24 have been either postponed or had their tip-off times pushed up, including Duke’s ACC bout with Wake Forest and North Carolina’s conference game against Virginia, which would have also included the dedication of Virginia’s court to former head coach Tony Bennett.

College basketball looks like it’s going to deal with quite a few shake-ups, with several situations pending.

Here are the events that have been affected in anticipation of the inclement weather.

Download the free USA TODAY app and turn on “Notifications” to get breaking news updates on the winter storm. Prefer email news alerts? Sign up for those here.

College sports rescheduled due to winter storm warning

All times Eastern

Men’s basketball

  • Saturday’s Arkansas vs. LSU SEC game tipoff has been pushed up to 4 p.m. from 7:30 p.m.
  • Saturday’s St. John’s vs. Xavier matchup tip-off has been pushed up to 1:30 p.m. from 2:30 p.m. (TNT)
  • Saturday’s South Carolina vs. Texas A&M tip-off has been pushed up to 1 p.m. from 3:30 p.m. and will now be broadcast on SECNetwork+.
  • Saturday’s Virginia vs. North Carolina tip-off has been pushed up to noon from 2 p.m. (court dedication to Tony Bennett postponed) (ESPN2)
  • Saturday’s Kentucky vs. Ole Miss tip-off has been pushed up to 11 a.m. from noon (ESPN)
  • Saturday’s Vanderbilt vs. Mississippi State tip-off has been pushed up to noon from 6 p.m. (SECNetwork+)
  • Saturday’s Wake Forest vs. Duke tip-off has been pushed up to noon from 5:45 p.m (The CW)
  • Saturday’s Saint Joseph’s vs. Dayton tip-off has been pushed up to 2 p.m. from 6 p.m.
  • Saturday’s Louisville vs. Virginia Tech tip-off has been pushed up to 2:15 p.m. from 3:15 p.m. (The CW)
  • Saturday’s Houston vs. Texas Tech tip-off has been pushed up to 2 p.m. from 6:30 p.m.
  • Saturday’s Little Rock vs. UT Martin doubleheader postponed
  • Saturday’s Towson vs. North Carolina A&T tip-off has been pushed up to noon
  • Saturday’s James Madison vs. Texas State tip-off has been pushed up to 1 p.m.
  • Saturday’s University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee vs. Youngstown State tip-off has been pushed up to 1 p.m. from
  • Jacksonville State vs. MTSU rescheduled to Friday at 6:30 p.m. from Saturday
  • Lipscomb vs. Florida Gulf Coast rescheduled to Friday, Jan. 23 from Saturday, Jan. 24
  • Georgia vs. Tennessee rescheduled to Wednesday, Jan. 28 from Tuesday, Jan. 27

Women’s basketball

  • UConn vs. Seton Hall tip-off has been pushed up to noon on Saturday, Jan. 24 from Sunday, Jan. 25
  • Saturday’s Princeton vs. Brown tip-off has been pushed up to noon
  • Saturday’s Eastern Kentucky vs. North Florida tip-off has been pushed up to 11 a.m.
  • Saturday’s Jacksonville State vs. UTEP tip-off has been pushed up to 1 p.m.
  • Duke vs. Pitt tip-off has been moved up to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 24 from Sunday, Jan. 25
  • Sunday’s Boston College vs. Louisville tip-off has been pushed up to 11 a.m. from 2 p.m.
  • Sunday’s Texas vs. Arkansas tip-off has been rescheduled to Thursday, Feb. 19 in Fayetteville, Arkansas
  • Sunday’s Georgia vs. Kentucky tip-off has been pushed up to 1 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 24
  • Monday’s Tennessee vs. Ole Miss game postponed to a later date to be determined

Swimming

  • Tennessee vs. Georgia swim meet rescheduled to 1 p.m. Friday from Saturday

Gymnastics

  • Friday’s Georgia vs. Oklahoma meet has been pushed up to 2:45 p.m. from 6 p.m.
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The dozens of men’s college basketball games that took place on Saturday, Jan. 24 were defined by a slew of eyebrow-raising efforts from what’s being hailed as the best freshman class in years.

Illinois’ Keaton Wagler scored 46 points – more than double his previous career high – in an upset win at No. 4 Purdue, projected No. 1 overall NBA draft pick AJ Dybantsa poured in a career-high 43 points in BYU’s victory over rival Utah and even in a losing effort, Houston’s Kingston Flemings had 42 points in a loss at No. 12 Texas Tech. According to ESPN research, it marked the first time in at least 20 years that multiple freshmen scored 40 or more points in a single day.

One of the more notable performances of the day came from someone who was playing in the G League a week ago.

In his first college game since 2023, Alabama’s Charles Bediako had 13 points, three rebounds, two blocks and two steals in 25 minutes in a 79-73 loss to Tennessee.

Bediako’s return had been one of the most controversial and breathlessly discussed subjects in the sport for much of the week. After playing two seasons for Alabama, from 2021-23, the seven-foot center declared for the NBA draft and played the next three seasons in the G League, most recently for the Motor City Cruise. Though Bediako has been playing professional basketball for the past three years, he has never played in an NBA game.

On Tuesday, Jan. 21, he filed a request to Tuscaloosa County (Alabama) Circuit Court for a temporary restraining order and/or preliminary injunction, with a Judge James Roberts Jr. granting a temporary restraining order the following day that made Bediako immediately eligible to suit up for coach Nate Oats and the No. 17 Crimson Tide.

Under the terms of the restraining order, Bediako is eligible until his next injunction hearing on Tuesday, Jan. 27, which means the Tennessee loss could end up being the only game he plays.

‘Right now I’m just focused on the team,’ Bediako said after the game. ‘Obviously, I’m just going to take what happened today, just continue to do the film, and right now our main focus is on this next game (against Missouri).’

Bediako made five of his six field-goal attempts in the loss to the Volunteers.

He was much more productive than many other former G League players who have joined college basketball teams for this season. Thierry Darlan is averaging just 6.5 points per game for Santa Clara, big man Abdullah Ahmed is averaging only 2.8 points in 14.8 minutes per game for No. 13 BYU, and London Johnson has yet to play in a game for No. 21 Louisville. James Nnaji, a seven-foot center who was selected in the 2023 NBA Draft and has played professionally in Europe, has only 10 points in six games for Baylor.

The trend of former professional players joining the college ranks has earned ire from across the sport and from the NCAA itself, which voiced its disapproval with the judge’s ruling on Bediako.

‘These attempts to sidestep NCAA rules and recruit individuals who have finished their time in college or signed NBA contracts are taking away opportunities from high school students,’ the NCAA said in a statement on Wednesday. ‘A judge ordering the NCAA let a former NBA player take the court Saturday against actual college student-athletes is exactly why Congress must step in and empower college sports to enforce our eligibility rules.’

How old is Charles Bediako?

Born on March 10, 2002, Bediako is 23 years old.

Charles Bediako stats

Since leaving Alabama, Bediako appeared in 82 G League games across three seasons with the Austin Spurs, Grand Rapids Gold and Motor City Cruise.

Here’s a look at his stats from his professional career:

  • 2023-24 (Austin): 5.8 points, 5.4 rebounds and 0.5 blocks in 14.6 minutes per game
  • 2024-25 (Grand Rapids): 9.9 points, 8.6 rebounds and 1.1 blocks in 24.5 minutes per game
  • 2025-26 (Motor City): 4.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 0.6 blocks in 15.1 minutes per game
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • The Denver Broncos, New England Patriots, Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks are the final four teams in the NFL playoffs.
  • Each of the remaining teams faces significant offseason decisions regarding key players who are impending free agents.
  • Defensive players like John Franklin-Myers (Broncos) and K’Lavon Chaisson (Patriots) are among the top free agents after strong seasons.
  • The Rams and Seahawks have multiple key defensive backs and offensive playmakers set to enter free agency.

The Denver Broncos, New England Patriots, Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks are the final four teams remaining in the NFL playoffs. The offseason has officially started for all other 28 NFL clubs.

Denver, New England, Los Angeles and Seattle will get a late start to the offseason, but planning has already begun. There are many big decisions for all four clubs on the horizon, regardless of their championship-round outcomes. Numerous impact players who will be on the field Jan. 25 are impeding free agents. Who should stay and who should go?

USA TODAY Sports identifies the biggest upcoming free agents for the Broncos, Patriots, Rams and Seahawks ahead of Sunday’s conference championship games:

Denver Broncos key free agents

DL John Franklin-Myers

Franklin-Myers is an unheralded but key member of a Denver defense that led the NFL with 68 sacks during the regular season. Franklin-Myers’ 7.5 sacks ranked third on the team. The interior defensive lineman has also registered 42 pressures entering the conference championship. He’s going to be one of the top interior defensive linemen if he hits free agency.

LB Alex Singleton

Singleton’s cancer battle was one of the NFL’s most heartwarming stories this season. On the field, his production is undeniable. He had a team-high 135 tackles during the regular season. The linebacker has a team-best 14 postseason tackles entering the conference championship game.  

CB Ja’Quan McMillian (restricted free agent)

McMillian is set to be a restricted free agent this offseason. He surprisingly beat out rookie Jahdae Barron for Denver’s top slot cornerback job. He’s played well ever since he captured the role. Pro Football Focus has given him a 78.4 coverage grade this season, which is the highest among Broncos cornerbacks. McMillian’s overtime interception where he snatched the football away from Bills wideout Brandin Cooks saved Denver’s season.

New England Patriots key free agents

OLB K’Lavon Chaisson

Chaisson’s produced a team-high 10.5 sacks and 68 pressures entering Sunday’s AFC title game. He’s found a home in New England in what’s been a career-year for the sixth-year outside linebacker.

S Jaylinn Hawkins

The sixth-year safety registered a team-best four interceptions during the regular season, to go with 71 tackles and six passes defended. His 973 total snaps entering Sunday is third most among Patriots defenders.  

DT Khyiris Tonga

Tonga’s helped clog the middle along the Patriots interior defensive line. He’s a good run-stuffing nose tackle. His ability as a nose tackle also aids three-technique defensive lineman Milton Williams.

Los Angeles Rams key free agents

S Kamren Curl

Curl’s overtime interception in Chicago helped the Rams seal the win. The safety leads the Rams with 23 postseason tackles. He’s been a good addition since the Rams signed him during the 2024 free agency period.

CB Cobie Durant

The 5-foot-11 cornerback sometimes has boom-or-bust plays, but he competes each and every week. His three postseason interceptions leads the Rams entering Sunday. Durant allowed a 55% completion percentage during the regular season. His 933 total snaps tops all Rams cornerbacks going into the conference championship.

CB Ahkello Witherspoon

The Rams must address their secondary through free agency and the draft with so many impeding free agents in the group. Witherspoon’s placement on injured reserve due to a shoulder injury was a blow to the Rams secondary. L.A.’s defensive backfield was vulnerable prior to Witherspoon’s injury.

Seattle Seahawks key free agents

RB Kenneth Walker III

Walker had his second 1,000-yard rushing season this year. The running back helps open up the Seahawks offense and has thrived in recent weeks, scoring three touchdowns in Seattle’s divisional-round drubbing of the San Francisco 49ers. His importance to Seattle offense is magnified as a result of Zach Charbonnet’s season-ending knee injury.

WR Rashid Shaheed

Shaheed is one of the best trade deadline additions this season. His franchise record 95-yard punt return TD in the divisional round electrified the Seahawks and the crowd at Lumen Field. He adds explosiveness to Seattle’s offense and special teams unit. He ranked among the league’s top five in both average kick return yards and average punt return yards.

S Coby Bryant

Bryant has played the most snaps among Seattle defenders this season. He allowed a 59% completion percentage in 15 starts during the regular season, while his four interceptions ranked second on the team. He’s a key member on Seattle’s top scoring defense.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

COLLEGE PARK, MD — The last time Iowa played against Maryland at the Xfinity Center, it was in front of a sold-out crowd who followed All-American guard Caitlin Clark’s every dribble.

Two years later, there were fewer fans and less cameras in the building. Clark has graduated and then-Iowa head coach Lisa Bluder retired. But the result? That was the same: Iowa won.

The Hawkeyes captured their seventh straight victory Thursday night, defeating the Terrapins 85-78 in overtime in their latest signature win. Maryland is the fourth ranked opponent the Hawkeyes have beaten this season. Iowa, in its second season under coach Jan Jensen, is 8-0 in Big Ten play for the first time since 1996 and ranked in the top 10 for the first time since Clark left for the WNBA.

And winning at Maryland is no easy task. Since joining the Big Ten in 2014, the Terps entered the matchup with an 85.9 winning percentage against conference opponents at home.

Jensen hopes the victory helps her team realize their talent level. If they can perform consistently, she believes their potential is limitless. The Hawkeyes face another ranked opponent Sunday, when they host No. 11 Ohio State (2 p.m. ET, Peacock).

“This team — we need to start understanding that we can be pretty good,” Jensen said. “So, we don’t need to be timid. We don’t need to be tentative. … I think sometimes we’re double checking.”

While the Hawkeyes got some timely baskets from behind the arc from Chit-Chat Wright and Taylor McCabe — who combined to shoot 7-of-14 from deep range — it was post play that powered Iowa over Maryland. And it’s been the Hawkeye’s prowess in the paint that has been largely responsible for its success all season.

One of the players excelling down low is a well-known commodity. Hannah Stuelke exploded onto the scene as a sophomore as Iowa made it to a second straight national title game in 2024. That season, Stuelke popped off for 47 points in a home win over Penn State. Now a senior, she’s averaging 14.1 points along with a career-highs in rebounds (8.6) and assists (2.9) per game.

Stuelke’s partner in the paint has been a bit of a revelation.

As a freshman last season, Ava Heiden played less than 10 minutes a game and never started. The 6-foot-4 Oregon native has since blossomed into Iowa’s top scorer, averaging 16.3 points a game. Heiden is shooting 62.6% from the field, which ranks sixth nationally. She’s also 13th nationally in effective field goal percentage and 24th in PER.

Instead of taking credit for Iowa’s success this season, Heiden deflects to her teammates.

“We have great passing guards this year. The way that Chit-Chat and McCabe and those guys can get it into us, it’s very difficult for a guard to have those skills, and those guys have it down to perfection,” Heiden told USA Today Sports. “And so, for Hannah and I, when those passes are that good, it’s very easy for us to work off of that and get some buckets for our team.”

As a team, Iowa ranks fifth nationally in assists per game with 20.9 and sixth in assisted shot rate with 69.4%. Many of those dimes wind up in the hands of Stuelke and Heiden, finishing under the rim with ease.

Heiden is among the most improved players in the country and a catalyst for Iowa regaining its position as a legitimate contender. According to Her Hoop Stats, Heiden has increased her scoring average by 11.2 points from last season, which is third-most among all Big Ten players who played in at least 19 games last year.

The sophomore says she spent much of the past year getting in extra work with Iowa assistant coach Randi Henderson, who was a captain for the Hawkeyes in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

“She was pretty raw. She was kind of frustrated. You know, she wanted to play and didn’t really understand the process until finally she was like, ‘OK, I’m just going to go get in the gym.’ And then she started to understand what it took,” Jensen said of Heiden’s freshman season. “She embraced the challenge. And we still have a lot of growth for her to do, and that’s what’s so exciting.’

Heiden hasn’t just become a reliable starting forward for the Hawkeyes. She’s transformed into someone Iowa can count on in important games.

The Maryland win was a prime example as Heiden spun around a defender to connect on a layup to give the Hawkeyes a three-point cushion with about two minutes left in overtime. Moments later, she confidently knocked down a pair of free throws.

“For her to hit that free throw, that was a lot of growth,” Jensen said of Heiden’s clutch basket. “A little bit more, ‘I got this.’ That’s what I want Ava to turn into. … Like, ‘I want the ball, I can score.’”

Across Iowa’s four Quad 1 wins — victories over Baylor, Nebraska, Michigan State and Maryland — Heiden is averaging 19 points, eight rebounds and 2.5 assists while shooting 64% from the floor. Put more simply, she’s playing well in big moments, which is often a trait of a great player.

It’s performing in those crucial matchups, seeing her stats jump and watching wins pile up for Iowa that has given Heiden self-assurance.

“Confidence is earned through the reps and seeing it go down,’ Heiden said. ‘I’m not a person where, if I hear, ‘Hey, be confident,’ — that’s not very helpful for me. Seeing that data, that’s very helpful, and that’s allowed me to build my confidence.”

With Heiden taking a leap, Wright transferring in from Georgia Tech and other players making improvements or adjusting to new roles, Iowa looks like a Big Ten title contender and a team that can make a deep run in March.

Jensen just needs her players to believe in their ability to take it to the next level.

“I don’t see it like everybody sees it. I just see the Big Ten as one heck of a conference with great coaches. And so, you got to find a way,” Jensen said. “They’re pretty gutty and resilient. If we ever lean into that — ‘We’re pretty good’ — I think then that’s where the magic can happen.”

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The injury bug has struck yet again for Gio Reyna.

The U.S. men’s national team midfielder missed Borussia Mönchengladbach’s match with Stuttgart on Sunday, Jan. 25, due to ‘muscular problems,’ the club said.

There hadn’t been any news of an injury before the match, and it’s unclear how much time Reyna could miss.

The injury is another frustrating setback for Reyna, who has dealt with a number of muscular issues throughout his career.

The 23-year-old moved to Gladbach in the offseason after struggling for minutes during his time at Borussia Dortmund.

Reyna missed a pair of Bundesliga matches in the fall with a thigh muscle injury. Overall, he’s made 14 appearances for Gladbach this season, including five starts. Reyna has yet to tally a goal or an assist for the Foals.

After starting three consecutive league matches for Gladbach prior to the winter break, Reyna played just 26 minutes in the club’s three matches in 2026 prior to the Stuttgart game.

Reyna starred for the USMNT in the November international window, making his first two international appearances in eight months. The midfielder scored a goal in a 2-1 win over Paraguay and notched an assist in a 5-1 thrashing of Uruguay.

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